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In Dartmoor there is a fascinating atmosphere of both nature and human history...
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...which you can see from the top of the soc. "Haytor Rocks"...
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I got up from the back of this rock for my wife not to see it...
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This is the way from the visitor centre of Dartmoor National Parc...
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...to the first group of rocks...
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...from the sight of a second rock group (soc. "tor" in the celtic language)
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...where horses are roaming almost freely...
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...and feel at home as you can see.
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Mounting up feels a little bit like "British Allgäu"...
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...and you see "orio cows" like the cookies (as we called them)...
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Sturdy foals are teasing their mothers...
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...and waiting for tourist to admire them...
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In Widecombe the mystic of Dartmoor is present within the small town...
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...with the Church of Saint Pancras in the middle...
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...where a plow stands next to the church´s most challenging event...
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...where a storm (lightning) killed 4 people and injured around 60 in 1638...
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The old entrance is closed...
-
...but not the graveyard that is still telling stories of old...
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...of the celtic cross...
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...and of life overcoming death.
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The next stop was at Bellever where I was hiking a little bit...
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...watching cattle grazing...
-
...while walking up the way to the "Bellever tor"..
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...through natural tunnels whispering words of former times...
-
...and people that first came up that hill...
-
...to watch and feel the atmosphere of a "tor" (word meaning: "to the light")
-
...where the sight is wide and lifting the spirit.
-
It is where you can see the remains of the people coming here...
-
...marking almost exact lines from south to north...
-
...leading to simple altars (soc. "cairns" in celtic)...
-
The way back passes old farms and you would not wonder if Robin Hood came along...
-
...and would help you find the way through the Bellever forest on the East Dart River...
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...riding over old bridges to seek for the Sheriff of Nottingham.
South of Britain - Chapter 5 - Dartmoor National Parc
In Dartmoor there is a fascinating atmosphere of both nature and human history...
http://www.simply-wilderness.com/images/sw/priv/UK17/Kap5/DSC_2042.jpg
...which you can see from the top of the soc. "Haytor Rocks"...
http://www.simply-wilderness.com/images/sw/priv/UK17/Kap5/DSC_2045.jpg
I got up from the back of this rock for my wife not to see it...
http://www.simply-wilderness.com/images/sw/priv/UK17/Kap5/DSC_2047.jpg
This is the way from the visitor centre of Dartmoor National Parc...
http://www.simply-wilderness.com/images/sw/priv/UK17/Kap5/DSC_2050.jpg
...to the first group of rocks...
http://www.simply-wilderness.com/images/sw/priv/UK17/Kap5/DSC_2053.jpg
...from the sight of a second rock group (soc. "tor" in the celtic language)
http://www.simply-wilderness.com/images/sw/priv/UK17/Kap5/DSC_2056.jpg
...where horses are roaming almost freely...
http://www.simply-wilderness.com/images/sw/priv/UK17/Kap5/DSC_2059.jpg
...and feel at home as you can see.
http://www.simply-wilderness.com/images/sw/priv/UK17/Kap5/DSC_2060.jpg
Mounting up feels a little bit like "British Allgäu"...
http://www.simply-wilderness.com/images/sw/priv/UK17/Kap5/DSC_2063.jpg
...and you see "orio cows" like the cookies (as we called them)...
http://www.simply-wilderness.com/images/sw/priv/UK17/Kap5/DSC_2065.jpg
Sturdy foals are teasing their mothers...
http://www.simply-wilderness.com/images/sw/priv/UK17/Kap5/DSC_2067.jpg
...and waiting for tourist to admire them...
http://www.simply-wilderness.com/images/sw/priv/UK17/Kap5/DSC_2069.jpg
In Widecombe the mystic of Dartmoor is present within the small town...
http://www.simply-wilderness.com/images/sw/priv/UK17/Kap5/DSC_2070.jpg
...with the Church of Saint Pancras in the middle...
http://www.simply-wilderness.com/images/sw/priv/UK17/Kap5/DSC_2071.jpg
...where a plow stands next to the church´s most challenging event...
http://www.simply-wilderness.com/images/sw/priv/UK17/Kap5/DSC_2073.jpg
...where a storm (lightning) killed 4 people and injured around 60 in 1638...
http://www.simply-wilderness.com/images/sw/priv/UK17/Kap5/DSC_2074.jpg
The old entrance is closed...
http://www.simply-wilderness.com/images/sw/priv/UK17/Kap5/DSC_2076.jpg
...but not the graveyard that is still telling stories of old...
http://www.simply-wilderness.com/images/sw/priv/UK17/Kap5/DSC_2079.jpg
...of the celtic cross...
http://www.simply-wilderness.com/images/sw/priv/UK17/Kap5/DSC_2081.jpg
...and of life overcoming death.
http://www.simply-wilderness.com/images/sw/priv/UK17/Kap5/DSC_2082.jpg
The next stop was at Bellever where I was hiking a little bit...
http://www.simply-wilderness.com/images/sw/priv/UK17/Kap5/DSC_2088.jpg
...watching cattle grazing...
http://www.simply-wilderness.com/images/sw/priv/UK17/Kap5/DSC_2089.jpg
...while walking up the way to the "Bellever tor"..
http://www.simply-wilderness.com/images/sw/priv/UK17/Kap5/DSC_2090.jpg
...through natural tunnels whispering words of former times...
http://www.simply-wilderness.com/images/sw/priv/UK17/Kap5/DSC_2091.jpg
...and people that first came up that hill...
http://www.simply-wilderness.com/images/sw/priv/UK17/Kap5/DSC_2092.jpg
...to watch and feel the atmosphere of a "tor" (word meaning: "to the light")
http://www.simply-wilderness.com/images/sw/priv/UK17/Kap5/DSC_2093.jpg
...where the sight is wide and lifting the spirit.
http://www.simply-wilderness.com/images/sw/priv/UK17/Kap5/DSC_2095.jpg
It is where you can see the remains of the people coming here...
http://www.simply-wilderness.com/images/sw/priv/UK17/Kap5/DSC_2098.jpg
...marking almost exact lines from south to north...
http://www.simply-wilderness.com/images/sw/priv/UK17/Kap5/DSC_2100.jpg
...leading to simple altars (soc. "cairns" in celtic)...
http://www.simply-wilderness.com/images/sw/priv/UK17/Kap5/DSC_2101.jpg
The way back passes old farms and you would not wonder if Robin Hood came along...
http://www.simply-wilderness.com/images/sw/priv/UK17/Kap5/DSC_2103.jpg
...and would help you find the way through the Bellever forest on the East Dart River...
http://www.simply-wilderness.com/images/sw/priv/UK17/Kap5/DSC_2104.jpg
...riding over old bridges to seek for the Sheriff of Nottingham.
http://www.simply-wilderness.com/images/sw/priv/UK17/Kap5/DSC_2105.jpg
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The Eden Project near St. Austell (Cornwall) is an extraordinary place with a great vision:
-
...if you believe it or if you check it: the dimension is abolutely HUGE...
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The work begun in 1998 in an clay pit where more than 100 million litres of water had to be drained...
-
...for real and constructed bees to come and help perform a miracle:
-
A huge shelter for jungle plants, another shelter for mediterranean plants and outdoor gardens...
-
...whose architecture and beautiful plants speak for itself...
-
...having exotic plants standing next to intense warnings about climate change...
-
...while we are standing in awe to the wonder of life...
-
...that is so seriously endangered by our soc. "civilization"...
-
...as it's beauty is so fragile due to our behaviour...
-
...although looking so strong...
-
...it needs protection even in regions like the mediterranean area...
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Will we change our behaviour so that plants can help us survive?
-
Nature does not need us. But we definitely need nature to survive!
South of Britain - Chapter 7 - Eden Project
The Eden Project near St. Austell (Cornwall) is an extraordinary place with a great vision:
http://www.simply-wilderness.com/images/sw/priv/UK17/Kap7/DSC_0141.jpg
...if you believe it or if you check it: the dimension is abolutely HUGE...
http://www.simply-wilderness.com/images/sw/priv/UK17/Kap7/DSC_0141a.jpg
The work begun in 1998 in an clay pit where more than 100 million litres of water had to be drained...
http://www.simply-wilderness.com/images/sw/priv/UK17/Kap7/DSC_0142.jpg
...for real and constructed bees to come and help perform a miracle:
http://www.simply-wilderness.com/images/sw/priv/UK17/Kap7/DSC_0144.jpg
A huge shelter for jungle plants, another shelter for mediterranean plants and outdoor gardens...
http://www.simply-wilderness.com/images/sw/priv/UK17/Kap7/DSC_0144a.jpg
...whose architecture and beautiful plants speak for itself...
http://www.simply-wilderness.com/images/sw/priv/UK17/Kap7/DSC_0148.jpg
...having exotic plants standing next to intense warnings about climate change...
http://www.simply-wilderness.com/images/sw/priv/UK17/Kap7/DSC_0151.jpg
...while we are standing in awe to the wonder of life...
http://www.simply-wilderness.com/images/sw/priv/UK17/Kap7/DSC_0160.jpg
...that is so seriously endangered by our soc. "civilization"...
http://www.simply-wilderness.com/images/sw/priv/UK17/Kap7/DSC_0162.jpg
...as it's beauty is so fragile due to our behaviour...
http://www.simply-wilderness.com/images/sw/priv/UK17/Kap7/DSC_0167.jpg
...although looking so strong...
http://www.simply-wilderness.com/images/sw/priv/UK17/Kap7/DSC_0169.jpg
...it needs protection even in regions like the mediterranean area...
http://www.simply-wilderness.com/images/sw/priv/UK17/Kap7/DSC_0172.jpg
Will we change our behaviour so that plants can help us survive?
http://www.simply-wilderness.com/images/sw/priv/UK17/Kap7/DSC_0179.jpg
Nature does not need us. But we definitely need nature to survive!
http://www.simply-wilderness.com/images/sw/priv/UK17/Kap7/DSC_0180.jpg
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Heligan is a garden older than 700 years that got lost but was brought back to life...
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...by Tim Smit, John Nelson and a team that turned back wilderness into a garden!
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My wife´s favourite flower bush: Hydrangea (Hortensie)
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Heligan also demonstrates best practice in stock breeding...
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...and how to care about animals.
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It is the most visited english garden since 1998 and a place to rest...
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...for those who enjoy old and new garden elements...
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...like these poppy flowers...
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...or older garden tools.
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Heligan keeps a mystery - the huge rhododendron tree knows it!
South of Britain - Chapter 3 - Lost Gardens of Heligan
Heligan is a garden older than 700 years that got lost but was brought back to life...
http://www.simply-wilderness.com/images/sw/priv/UK17/Kap3/DSC_1012.jpg
...by Tim Smit, John Nelson and a team that turned back wilderness into a garden!
http://www.simply-wilderness.com/images/sw/priv/UK17/Kap3/DSC_1015.jpg
My wife´s favourite flower bush: Hydrangea (Hortensie)
http://www.simply-wilderness.com/images/sw/priv/UK17/Kap3/DSC_1021.jpg
Heligan also demonstrates best practice in stock breeding...
http://www.simply-wilderness.com/images/sw/priv/UK17/Kap3/DSC_1023.jpg
...and how to care about animals.
http://www.simply-wilderness.com/images/sw/priv/UK17/Kap3/DSC_1024.jpg
It is the most visited english garden since 1998 and a place to rest...
http://www.simply-wilderness.com/images/sw/priv/UK17/Kap3/DSC_1028.jpg
...for those who enjoy old and new garden elements...
http://www.simply-wilderness.com/images/sw/priv/UK17/Kap3/DSC_1029.jpg
...like these poppy flowers...
http://www.simply-wilderness.com/images/sw/priv/UK17/Kap3/DSC_1034.jpg
...or older garden tools.
http://www.simply-wilderness.com/images/sw/priv/UK17/Kap3/DSC_1039.jpg
Heligan keeps a mystery - the huge rhododendron tree knows it!
http://www.simply-wilderness.com/images/sw/priv/UK17/Kap3/DSC_1051.jpg
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Glastonbury Abbey - one of Britains first monasteries did surely not begun with that building...
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Die Weißdornbäume dort sind eine Mittelmeer-Variante des Crataegus monogyna...
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...der im Gegensatz zu unserem Weißdorn 2x im Jahr blüht und den Beinamen "Biflora" hat.
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Even the monastery garden is beautiful enough to visit Glastonbury Abbey...
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In the 14th century Glastonbury became a rich and powerful monastery...
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...but the foundation of this Ladies Chapel was nothing else than a simple hut.
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Also the trees there are impressive: a red beech older than 300 years...
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...and the whole complex reveals the size of the former organization.
-
Another white thorn tree and its impressive up to 5 cm long thornes...
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A look into the reinvented monastery kitchen...
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...reveals the meaning of a german saying "Leg einen Zahn zu" (lower the pot on the gear).
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The white thorntree can become quite old (the oldest one in Hethel/UK is about 700 years old).
-
The colours of Ladies Chapel as they might have looked like...
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In the lowest accessible floor you find a burial vault...
-
...that might have looked like this in former times...
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...covered with rose blossoms...
-
...overhung by a stone picture: the scandal of the cross - HE who said: I am the door...
South of Britain - Chapter 6 - Glastonbury
Glastonbury Abbey - one of Britains first monasteries did surely not begun with that building...
http://www.simply-wilderness.com/images/sw/priv/UK17/Kap6/DSC_0108.jpg
Die Weißdornbäume dort sind eine Mittelmeer-Variante des Crataegus monogyna...
http://www.simply-wilderness.com/images/sw/priv/UK17/Kap6/DSC_0109.jpg
...der im Gegensatz zu unserem Weißdorn 2x im Jahr blüht und den Beinamen "Biflora" hat.
http://www.simply-wilderness.com/images/sw/priv/UK17/Kap6/DSC_0114.jpg
Even the monastery garden is beautiful enough to visit Glastonbury Abbey...
http://www.simply-wilderness.com/images/sw/priv/UK17/Kap6/DSC_0115.jpg
In the 14th century Glastonbury became a rich and powerful monastery...
http://www.simply-wilderness.com/images/sw/priv/UK17/Kap6/DSC_0117.jpg
...but the foundation of this Ladies Chapel was nothing else than a simple hut.
http://www.simply-wilderness.com/images/sw/priv/UK17/Kap6/DSC_0118.jpg
Also the trees there are impressive: a red beech older than 300 years...
http://www.simply-wilderness.com/images/sw/priv/UK17/Kap6/DSC_0123.jpg
...and the whole complex reveals the size of the former organization.
http://www.simply-wilderness.com/images/sw/priv/UK17/Kap6/DSC_0124.jpg
Another white thorn tree and its impressive up to 5 cm long thornes...
http://www.simply-wilderness.com/images/sw/priv/UK17/Kap6/DSC_0125.jpg
A look into the reinvented monastery kitchen...
http://www.simply-wilderness.com/images/sw/priv/UK17/Kap6/DSC_0127.jpg
...reveals the meaning of a german saying "Leg einen Zahn zu" (lower the pot on the gear).
http://www.simply-wilderness.com/images/sw/priv/UK17/Kap6/DSC_0128.jpg
The white thorntree can become quite old (the oldest one in Hethel/UK is about 700 years old).
http://www.simply-wilderness.com/images/sw/priv/UK17/Kap6/DSC_0130.jpg
The colours of Ladies Chapel as they might have looked like...
http://www.simply-wilderness.com/images/sw/priv/UK17/Kap6/DSC_0132.jpg
In the lowest accessible floor you find a burial vault...
http://www.simply-wilderness.com/images/sw/priv/UK17/Kap6/DSC_0133.jpg
...that might have looked like this in former times...
http://www.simply-wilderness.com/images/sw/priv/UK17/Kap6/DSC_0135.jpg
...covered with rose blossoms...
http://www.simply-wilderness.com/images/sw/priv/UK17/Kap6/DSC_0136.jpg
...overhung by a stone picture: the scandal of the cross - HE who said: I am the door...
http://www.simply-wilderness.com/images/sw/priv/UK17/Kap6/DSC_0137.jpg
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May I present...
-
...the abbey of Hastings - Battle abbey:
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The battlefield looks so peaceful...
-
...where William the Conqueror changed Britains history on the 14 october 1066 AD.
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But William was not so amused on that day...
-
...because Harold King of England did not show up the way he wanted.
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Between 5.000 and 10.000 men lost their lives where sheep are grazing...
-
...and we only see the tidy yard of a manor house.
-
Thank god trees outlive human wars...
-
...and even flourish like these trees in the New Forest near Southamption...
-
...but they also face their enemies...
-
... but the beauty of life will always come back.
South of Britain - Chapter 2 - Hastings and New Forest
May I present...
http://www.simply-wilderness.com/images/sw/priv/UK17/Kap2/DSC_0987.jpg
...the abbey of Hastings - Battle abbey:
http://www.simply-wilderness.com/images/sw/priv/UK17/Kap2/DSC_0988.jpg
The battlefield looks so peaceful...
http://www.simply-wilderness.com/images/sw/priv/UK17/Kap2/DSC_0989.jpg
...where William the Conqueror changed Britains history on the 14 october 1066 AD.
http://www.simply-wilderness.com/images/sw/priv/UK17/Kap2/DSC_0990.jpg
But William was not so amused on that day...
http://www.simply-wilderness.com/images/sw/priv/UK17/Kap2/DSC_0991.jpg
...because Harold King of England did not show up the way he wanted.
http://www.simply-wilderness.com/images/sw/priv/UK17/Kap2/DSC_0993.jpg
Between 5.000 and 10.000 men lost their lives where sheep are grazing...
http://www.simply-wilderness.com/images/sw/priv/UK17/Kap2/DSC_0995.jpg
...and we only see the tidy yard of a manor house.
http://www.simply-wilderness.com/images/sw/priv/UK17/Kap2/DSC_0996.jpg
Thank god trees outlive human wars...
http://www.simply-wilderness.com/images/sw/priv/UK17/Kap2/DSC_1004.jpg
...and even flourish like these trees in the New Forest near Southamption...
http://www.simply-wilderness.com/images/sw/priv/UK17/Kap2/DSC_1006.jpg
...but they also face their enemies...
http://www.simply-wilderness.com/images/sw/priv/UK17/Kap2/DSC_1007.jpg
... but the beauty of life will always come back.
http://www.simply-wilderness.com/images/sw/priv/UK17/Kap2/DSC_1008.jpg